A geospatial approach to monitoring the impacts of climate change on water resources in South Africa

A geospatial approach to monitoring the impacts of climate change on water resources in South Africa
Targeted Action Groups
  • Implement the right to water and sanitation and ensure access to safe drinking water and sanitation in emergency situations, build resilience and adaptive capacity to climate change and natural disasters,
  • Ensure universal access to water (in rural areas),
  • Strengthen cooperation on multi-purpose infrastructure, including hydropower, strengthen North-South, South-South and triangular cooperation in data and information-sharing and capacity-building,
  • Mobilizing additional financial resources and promoting innovative financing, increasing water efficiency and sustainable management through science, technology, innovation and education.
Sector/Domain

Climate change

Implementation Instances

Department of Water and Sanitation

Nature of the organism

Gov/Local Authority

NGOs

other

Intervention zone
South Africa
Justification

South Africa is experiencing water quantity and quality issues due to environmental and socio-economic changes (Parks et al., 2019). Greater pressure on water resources in the event of climate change impacts could exacerbate existing problems and create new ones (New, 2018). Water resources, infrastructure, the health sector, food security, as well as ecosystem services and biodiversity are extremely threatened by climate change. As a result, it contributes to changing the number and distribution of people affected by water scarcity. Together with the high levels of inequality and poverty in South Africa, this creates crucial challenges for national development (Ziervogel et al., 2014)

Level of advancement

Already done

Under implementation

In the project status

Type of support desired

Financing

Technique

Visibility / promotion

Focal point

Apheles Mgabisa

Focal contact

0763205231 / mgabisaa@dws.gov.za